Showing posts with label Medusa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medusa. Show all posts

Sunday, October 1, 2017

Sunday Rerun: Limited Funds; Unlimited Fun!

Martinex1: Hello all and welcome to October.  Redartz and I have so much goodness in store for you this Autumn.   We plan to keep you entertained this month with musings about Batman's cases, Halloween faces, and Saturday morning races.  So stay tuned in.

Please feel free to contact us at backinthebronzeage@gmail.com if you have any suggestions or would like to contribute a guest post.  Believe me, we would love to have some guest writers share their reviews or columns here.

Today, let's kick off the month with a quick Sunday rerun from the wondrous Bronze Age Babies blog and July 9th, 2015.  This was one of my earliest examples of the game that appears in our regular feature The Quarter Bin.   The focus is on female super-heroes.  When this feature first started I only included nine covers for each event; as an extra bonus today scroll down to see a few new options and selections.   Have fun and we will be back tomorrow with an all new feature.


Sheroes.   The Super Heroine $1 Shopping Spree.
  
(BAB 7.9.15) Martinex1.: Here we go again. We are taking a trip to the ever changing, ever evolving comic store with only loose change in our pocket. It is time for another round of “If I Had A Buck…” This time around, the spinner rack selection has only heroines, superwomen, and female champions from which to choose.

There has been much talk in the comic industry recently about the attempt to reach female readers and to embrace strong female protagonists. There are numerous titles on the stands today with women headliners and that is a good thing. The cinematic Marvel universe has yet to create an A list film for a heroine. Earlier endeavors in the cinema with Red Sonja, Elektra, Catwoman, and Supergirl starring were less than stellar. Recently some of the Marvel films have established strong women in team efforts with Black Widow, Scarlet Witch, and Gamora. And there is great anticipation around the Ms. Marvel solo film. Hopefully someday we will see the Wasp, Tigra, Valkyrie, Batwoman, Raven, Huntress, and others on the silver screen.

In comics, Wonder Woman was always the grandmother of all heroines. Her costume is iconic and she ranks as a great character in a pantheon alongside Batman and Superman. Her comic has endured in one form or another for many decades, she was the subject of a successful live action television show, and she will be reappearing on film soon (hopefully arriving in her invisible jet). Honestly, I never read much Wonder Woman until George Perez took over the creative control in the 1980s, but always recognized her stature particularly in the JLA.

The late 70s brought to Marvel Comic fans an array of female headliners that have definitely stood the test of time.  Many of these characters were initially derivatives of their male counterparts and were used to shore up marketing trademarks and licenses. But characters like Spider Woman, She-Hulk, and Ms. Marvel have evolved with distinct personalities, traits, and conflicts. There have been many compelling takes on these characters over the years.

Spider-Woman’s initial series ran for fifty issues, which is no small feat. She starred in a Saturday morning cartoon show as well.  The comic established Jessica Drew’s uniqueness (despite her derivative name) with her base of operations on the West Coast, with a bizarre cast of villains who had horror leanings, and a rather convoluted and evolving origin. Her series had her battle weirdos like the Brothers Grimm, Daddy Longlegs, and Gypsy Moth. She teamed regularly and also fought against the Werewolf By Night. In her introduction, she was evolved from a spider (though that origin quickly changed) and she emitted an odor or creepiness that turned people off. Today she is a consistent star in the Avengers titles and continues to grow in a new solo series.

She-Hulk likewise went through many iterations. She started off with a very tame origin of a blood transfusion from her cousin Bruce Banner; her initial series was fairly mundane. John Byrne advanced her character in his run on the Fantastic Four and in a new solo title in which the heroine regularly broke the fourth wall and had many humorous adventures and interludes. Her most recent solo title is critically acclaimed as it focuses on Jennifer’s legal expertise and relationships.

Throughout the last five decades Marvel advanced many diverse female characters in their team books and solo titles. In my opinion these characters were just as compelling as their male counterparts and often drove very interesting stories with complex characterizations and problems. The list includes but is not limited to:  The Cat, Moondragon, Mantis, Thundra, Firestar, Aleta, Nikki, Tigra, Snowbird, Aurora, Hellcat, Valkyrie, Darkstar, Sif, Medusa, Crystal, Nova, Jocasta, Sheena, Storm, Kitty Pride, Dazzler, Dagger, Rogue, Marionette, and Songbird. Some fared better than others over time. Marvel also established some memorable female villains in Black Cat, Deathbird, Typhoid Mary, Moonstone, Mystique, White Queen, Destiny, Morgan LeFay, Madame Masque, Nebula, and of course Dark Phoenix.  

Over at DC, we saw Fire, Ice, Dove, Power Girl, Huntress, Oracle, Black Canary, Supergirl, Catwoman, Hawkgirl, Jesse Quick, Batgirl, and many others.

 So today, in this discussion there are nine titles to choose from, with nine female leads (I cheated a little to get Thundra in play), and only $1.00 to spend. I am curious what you would buy if there were only female characters on the spinner rack.

But even more importantly, I am curious what you think about the many heroines. Who are your favorites? What stories are worth reading? Who has better offerings in this category, Marvel or DC? Who would you like to see more of and should have their own series? Who should lead a team? Who would you like to see get a solo movie? 

And as always, have fun! Here is the list:

The Daring New Adventures of Supergirl #7; $0.60
Dazzler #8; $0.50
Huntress #8; $1.00 (Yeah, I know you would have to spend all of your money, but that is a cool Staton cover!)
Marvel Chillers featuring Tigra The Were-Woman #5; $0.25
Marvel Two-In-One #56 starring Thundra; $0.40 (That punch had to put it on the list!)
Ms. Marvel #21; $0.35
Savage She-Hulk #10; $0.50 (with a Michael Golden cover!)
Spider-Woman #32; $0.50
Wonder Woman #5; $0.75





Martinex1:  So those were the original offerings from a couple of years ago, but here are some more heroine driven books that may be more to your liking.   What do you think?  Would either of the Starfires make your list?  How about Raven (she was one of my favorite Titans)?  Or Firestar with great pencils from Art Adams?   Share your musings with us this fine Sunday!















Thursday, September 21, 2017

Rank and File: Six Marvel Characters That Deserved Bronze Age Embracing!


Martinex1: I read an article from the late 1980s that lamented the fact that new comic characters were being created when existing shelved characters could have sufficed.  It posed the argument that many second tier characters under the proper creative spirit could have been guided to be a reasonable threat in terms of a villain or a noted hero.

The Scourge of the Underworld story line would never have had to exist if characters were treated as three dimensional material. Likewise was a character like Darkhawk necessary while Nova waited in the wings?  Or as was asked in previous columns, was Dr. Doom the only serious megalomaniac available?  Why was he reduced to such common use that he had to tackle the likes of Dazzler?

But the situation was nothing new, going all the way back to the Golden Age of comics, characters were created and disposed of while others jumped to super-stardom.  And redundancy of powers was never the sole defining criteria for approval or dismissal - just ask Captain Cold, Mr. Freeze, and Killer Frost.

Today, I have created a list of six Marvel characters that back in the Bronze Age I wanted to be more successful and in use.   For whatever reason they fell to the second or third tier in popular employment and never maintained a headliner status (if they were ever offered a lead role at all).  I see great opportunity in their personality, power, design, and attributes.

My question is why weren't they used more?  And why weren't they successful?   For that matter, do you agree that they should be on the list?  Who would you recommend as an underplayed creative commodity?

Feel free to join in and rank characters that need to be embraced!

1) Black Goliath / Giant-Man / Bill Foster: Introduced way back in Avengers Vol 1, #32, Dr. Bill Foster had been hanging around in various guises throughout the Bronze Age.  After augmenting Pym's formula he became a hero in his own right and had a short-lived series called Black Goliath.   Following that run, he made appearances in The Champions, and later teamed up with the likes of Spider-Man and the Thing.  His most notable appearances in my opinion were in Marvel Two-In-One where his friendship with the Thing really helped show his character as a trustworthy friend, generally good guy, somewhat careful hero, and decent poker player.  In my opinion, in his last incarnation as the new Giant-Man he should have been the go-to powerhouse for brains and muscle for teams like the Defenders and the Avengers.   Alas, he never seemed to get a full chance and the last I heard he was killed off in a modern adventure.  I found it interesting that in an issue of What If (see the Giant-Man panel below), he was offered a role in the Fantastic Four to replace an injured Thing; in that imaginary tale Foster received the fame, accolades, and notoriety he deserved.  I wish that would have happened in the mainstream Marvel stories.






 2) Mister Machine / X-51 / Machine Man / Aaron Stack:  Machine Man is such a strange creation as originally envisioned by Jack Kirby first in the 2001: Space Odyssey series and then in the eponymous Machine Man run in the late 1970s.  Alternatively known as Mister Machine and X-51, the living robot sought to live a normal life and adopted the name of Aaron Stack while living in suburbia and working a job as an insurance adjuster. His body is made of steel with limbs that extend similarly to those of the children's cartoon character Inspector Gadget.  But I found the character intriguing as he continually sought some meaning to his life.   Even more so than characters like the Vision, Machine Man was constantly distant from human emotions despite thorough introspection.  Though he sought to understand, the world remained uniquely foreign to him. When Steve Ditko took over his series, that strangeness became even more apparent as he sacrificed life and limb despite really understanding what he was fighting for other than some programmed "correctness."  I enjoy this character and I would have liked to see him used more.   Despite the X-Men being designed for mutants, I think this oddball would have fit in well as that team's version of the Vision.  What could be more "mutant" than a conscious mechanism?  However, the character never reached his potential.  He appeared in a mini-series back in the 80s, is used intermittently, and somewhat relegated to the trash heap.


 3) Thundra:  The time traveling Femizon from the 23rd century city of Greater Milago (Milwaukee- Chicago) may seem silly but remains one of my favorite characters from the Bronze Age.  Her adventures with the Thing are of particular interest.  She was a great foil for Ben Grimm and despite her surface characterization as a "strong woman," she developed into a character that I continually enjoyed reading about.   Her guest appearances in Marvel Two-In-One during the Project Pegasus story were particularly witty and fun.   When she previously appeared in Fantastic Four as a Frightful Four recruit, I cheered for her possible acceptance onto the hero team.   Her costume was simple but memorable.  She had various adventures and at times partnered with Hyperion and Arkon. My hope was that she would actually end up on the FF or in some other way partnered with Ben Grimm.  She was a breath of much needed new air into the first family of comics.


 4) Sunfire: Shiro Yoshida was a young headstrong mutant whose mother was exposed to the radiation from the bombing of Hiroshima.   He was created by Roy Thomas and first appeared in X-Men #64 in 1970.   Over the years he has battled Namor and has been associated with the X-Men, the Horsemen of the Apocalypse, the Pacific Overlords, and Big Hero 6, but there are really no memorable adventures involving Shiro.   His limited exposure is interesting because he actually appeared in Giant Size X-Men #1 as one of the brand new international team that included Wolverine, Nightcrawler, Storm, and Colossus.  Somehow after that early esteemed adventure he just drifted away as a rather self-absorbed loner.  It is too bad because his power set of nuclear blasts and his Japanese perspective may have been an interesting addition to the team.   His costume design is one of the best of the era and he stood out whenever he appeared.   Believe it or not, his character made it onto the Saturday morning cartoon Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends.  Personally despite his renegade attitude, I would have enjoyed seeing Sunfire as a regular team member somewhere - perhaps in the West Coast Avengers or the Defenders.


 5) Count Nefaria: This villainous leader of the Maggia, Luchino Nefaria (okay, his name is a little too on the nose) first appeared in Avengers #13 and had a typical existence as a mediocre comic book crime lord throughout the Silver Age.  He tussled with Iron Man and some others in now forgotten tales.  But that all changed in the early run of the "all new, all different" Uncanny X-Men when Count Nefaria masterminded a scheme in partnership with the Ani-Men that culminated with the death of Thunderbird when the villain escaped.   Despite that significant development, the Count did not re-emerge until the classic arc in Avengers #164-166 in which he absorbed the power of Whirlwind, the Living Laser, and the original Power Man.  Possessing the strength of Superman (as he is commonly thought to represent) and retaining the wits and cunning of a criminal mastermind, he easily took down all of the Avengers.  Wonder Man, Captain America, and even Thor could not bring him down.  Only through some trickery to coincide with a barrage of attacks did the Avengers manage to temporarily subdue him.   If you haven't read the Jim Shooter and John Byrne masterpiece, do yourself a favor and take a look.   My take on the whole affair is that Nefaria should have become an "A" level threat to both the X-Men and the Avengers and should have been on par with Magneto, Kang, and Ultron.   Instead he has basically disappeared.  He was put under the control of the Grim Reaper for a later Avengers story and ended up becoming an ionic energy being similar to Wonder Man.   I think there were missed opportunities. A villain that kills an X-Man and manhandles the strongest of Avengers deserves a place in the nemesis hall-of-fame.






6) Medusa: The queen of the Inhumans has one of the most striking appearances in all of comicdom.  And as far as powers go, Medusa's living hair has to be the strangest example.  Like Thundra, Medusa got her start as a villain alongside the Frightful Four and faced the FF and later Spider-Man.   Revealed to be a noble Inhuman, her character slowly morphed from a wild criminal to a more nuanced nemesis and ultimately a confidant.   Her time as a replacement member on the Fantastic Four (following that of her sister Crystal) sticks with me as part of a great time for comics.   Her relationship with Reed Richards, though subtle and never realized fully, had me completely entertained.  I had partly hoped that Sue would leave the Baxter Building for Namor and Reed and Medusa would become a couple.  Medusa's ability to deal with Reed's brainiac aloofness said all that needed to be said about the character.  She was smart and strong willed and a leader.  In the long run, Medusa disappeared back into the Inhumans (a team that never really shines when put in the spotlight).  Visually, when her hair is in action, Medusa is perfect for the comic book medium.  Although she appears regularly in the Marvel Universe including a stint on a new FF with Ant-Man, I think her heyday was back in the Bronze Age when she could have really emerged as a powerful character.


 So there you have it BitBA fans; that is my list of under-appreciated Marvel creations.  Who would you add to the list and who would you take away?   Who deserves more air time, and who deserves to be put to pasture?

I am looking forward to your comments today, so let the opinions fly.  Oh, and please keep input limited to Marvel creations  as we will explore DC and Charlton at a later date.  Cheers all!



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